2007
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.1012813
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Islamic Mutual Funds as Faith-Based Funds in a Socially Responsible Context

Abstract: Defining social investing and its boundaries is a challenging task. Since the religious beginning of ethical investments, many overlapping investment styles have been grouped into the bucket of socially responsible investments, or SRI. This includes, for instance, faith-based investments. In this paper we study the underlying principles of SRI and Islamic funds as investment classes, and try to determine whether Islamic mutual funds, as faith-based investments, can be included into the category of socially res… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…As explained by Forte and Miglietta (2007), both types of funds have social, ethical, and financial objectives, and both use negative screening (filtering) criteria in the selection of stocks for their portfolios to reflect these objectives. For Islamic funds, the source of guidance is Shari'ah.…”
Section: Sri and Islamic Fundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As explained by Forte and Miglietta (2007), both types of funds have social, ethical, and financial objectives, and both use negative screening (filtering) criteria in the selection of stocks for their portfolios to reflect these objectives. For Islamic funds, the source of guidance is Shari'ah.…”
Section: Sri and Islamic Fundsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is noteworthy that while there are some common grounds between socially responsible investing and faith-based investing, there is little justification to argue that the latter is a sub-category of the former, much less to equate the two. Forte and Miglietta (2007) offered qualitative and quantitative evidence that Islamic funds were characteristically different from SRI funds in terms of asset allocation and econometric profile.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many justifications in previous works support mixing Islamic and SRI strategies. Forte and Miglietta (2007) show that Islamic investment and SRI have different characteristics in terms of asset allocations, econometric profiles and sector exposure. Despite empirical evidence that both Islamic and SRI funds are more oriented toward growth and small-cap stocks (Walkshaeusl and Lobe, 2012), in very developed SRI markets, SRI funds are more oriented toward large caps .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%